You're paranoid. Maybe you should lay off the grass...
Perhaps but the anti legalization crowd is pretty powerful nationally. They aren't going to distinguish between edibles and pot in their propaganda. I wouldn't be so confident that politicians in other states or are at the national level will be willing to risk supporting legalization if Colorado screws this up.
You're paranoid. Maybe you should lay off the grass...
Its hard to tell. I just know Texas will keep the beer, jeans and redneck for a while. No self respecting redneck is gonna want that hippie ass weed. It's a cultural decision as much as it is about making mistakes imo. If you have dip and Wild Turkey there is no need for any other plant product. Damn sissy drug,
This drug use goes through cycles as well. Nicotine from Pipes is not cool right now but females smoking that fat cigar like an old white guy is.
California has to be full ahead. Watch and wait. In the long run I think it's here to stay.
Its better than him getting drunk and wanting to fight everyone.
I prefer the laid back weed druggie, as opposed to the sloppy, up chuck, ethanol druggie.
Story reminds me of this.
I am on this topic but it's not from smoking weed. Stopped liking it 20 years ago. I'd like to see marijuana legalized nationally or at a minimum decriminalized. It was the topic of my senior research paper in high school 29 years ago. The pro pot crowd has always been good at screwing themselves.
There's a good show on cnbc tomorrow night called Colorado Pot Rush.
Here's a segment on one of the 'potrepreneurs'
http://www.cnbc.com/id/101445550
These people aren't trying to sell pot to pot smokers, they want to expand the market and edibles is the way to do that. The green they're after isn't pot and I won't be shocked if they take down the whole legalization effort in their quest to get the green. It's not just wall street that does dumb things chasing money.
The pro pot crowd is a lot bigger than 29 years ago when weed was supposed to make you grow an extra arm to shoot heroin into. This is not that generation.
So you want to ban hash oil. That's nice. Now what bad things have happened due to people eating hash oil products?
We will go back to the same thing. What fatalities or public health risks are there regarding eating 'edibles' do you have for us? Apparently the OP and post #14 do not have any. We are still waiting.
http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_25...al-3-2-million
Colorado marijuana tax revenues total $3.2 million in February
Tax revenues from Colorado's sales of medical and recreational marijuana in February increased from the previous month, according to figures released Wednesday by the state.
Colorado collected $3.2 million in February, below the state's projection of $3.7 million but slightly above above the $2.9 million it gathered in January.
In February, Colorado collected $1.43 million from a special 10 percent sales tax on recreational marijuana, plus another $438,253 from the state's standard 2.9 percent sales tax.
The 2.9 percent sales tax on medical marijuana produced revenues of $1.02 million in February, an increase from the $913,519 collected in January and far above the $791,000 the state had projected in February.
Conversely, the state projected that the 15 percent excise tax on the sale of recreational marijuana would bring in $739,330 the actual total was $339,615, 54 percent below expectations. The 15 percent excise tax produced $195,318 in January.
As was the case in January, Denver County generated the largest amount of tax revenue, with the 2.9 percent sales tax on medical marijuana totaling $483,432. The 2.9 percent tax on recreational pot brought in $245,709, with the 10 percent sales tax adding another $710,930.
Just a few months into the first year of legalized recreational marijuana sales, finding certainty when it comes to pot revenues has proved to be elusive. In February, Gov. John Hickenlooper's budget office predicted tax and fee revenues from marijuana would total about $134 million in the next fiscal year; however, a month later, the state's Legislative Council said the total would be half as much.
The legislature's Joint Budget Committee on Tuesday pledged to craft a bill that would force the state to wait until it had actual figures before spending the revenues from marijuana.
Natalie Mullis, chief economist for the Legislative Council, which provides the state with its revenue forecasts, said future revenues remain uncertain.
"It's impossible to know, based on these first two months, how much revenue they'll be in the future," she said. "This isn't representative of what revenues they'll be a year, or even six months from now,"
So snakeboy has nothing.
The argument hinges entirely on education, not necessarily on regulation, IMO. If you educate people about the dangers of edibles, then people, acting in their best interest, will know they shouldn't overdo them
You will always have the idiots that think they're invincible and will eventually do stupid things, but you can't cure or regulate stupid.
if somebody is actually bent on going crazy with edibles, i doubt legality will stop them anyway. like nono said, if people are educated and learn the dangers of this , they can make well informed decisions, legal or not.
I've already given my take.
pgardn thinks I'm wrong and things will work themselves out in Colorado. Legit take and I hope he's right.
El Nono just gave his take.
I didn't exclude chump even though nipping at people's heels is his schtick, he is capable of giving his own take on the rare occasion he's willing to.
I specifically excluded you fuzzy because you never have your own take on anything. All you can ever do is nip at people's heels or regurgitate someone else's opinion as your own. So what's it going to be fuzzy, are you going to claim pgardn's take or El Nono's take as your own. Or are you still waiting for someone to tell you what you think.
me, and unless you have had the edible in question before there is little way to judge it's potency. Even then, it's hard to judge for a newbie.
Yup, I believe they label edibles in Cali, but I am not sure how accurate that process is. There will be hiccups but it became legal not even 6 months ago, of course they don't have the ins and outs down pat yet. Also, this kid wasn't of legal age in the first place, was he? AFAIK it's 21 to buy pot in CO.
Here Fuzzy, I found your opinion for you...
http://www.alternet.org/drugs/one-de...-education-and
Lol "I love you Alice B. Toklas"
I haven't seen that movie in forever.
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/marijua...ry?id=22350866
What opinion. I told you that the regulations that they were putting in appeared to be modeled after what the FDA does and as such I was fine with it.
You have repeatedly said 'bad stuff' is going to happen and I will again ask you for an example. I await for you once again to say that I don not have a take as if that makes any difference either way to begin with. You are either really stupid or trolling. You said before that you weren't trolling so I will bow to your wisdom.
I would like to add while snakeboy is determined to try and pigeonhole the debate into his insipid bull , the national discussion as well as the discussion in Colorado. The concern is about insects and mold and not about crime and death. These are things that are easily handled by food safety measures that have been used for over a century.
The frantic reefer madness stupidity is snakeboys own.
I'm not pigeonholing anything. I asked for opinions on how to best implement legalization in a way that leads to further legalization in other states. I gave my opinion, you don't have one. All you can do is argue the details of a particular case or pretend that nothing bad can happen from marketing edibles to first time users.
More headlines from Colorado...
Richard Kirk Ate Pot Candy Before Killing Wife Kristine Kirk in Denver
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/6273...irk-in-denver/
Denver man consumed edible pot before killing wife, police suspect
http://www.latimes.com/nation/nation...#ixzz2zGB4aTAi
Two Denver deaths tied to recreational marijuana use
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/two-denv...marijuana-use/
Expensive lessons.
But there's. No limit on much more pathogenic alcohol and many die from alcohol poisoning and alcohol enabled crimes which for some reason doesn't get. Mentioned here by right. Wingers
You going to be like Darrin and climate and leave for a week for other trolls after you are refuted until another anecdote comes to light?
Pot Smoke And Mirrors: Vaporizer Pens Hide Marijuana Use
Most vape pens don't actually vaporize the marijuana plant. They're loaded with marijuana concentrates or "hash oil:" a viscous, yellow resin chemically extracted from the plant. In many places, that extraction often occurs in somebody's kitchen which can be explosive and dangerous.
And the concentrates can be strong. Really, really strong. Marijuana leaves can contain up to about 20 percent THC, the psychoactive chemical that makes you feel high. But the concentrates can contain up to 90 percent THC. Esquibel says she almost fainted when she tried her first hit.
Those high THC levels worry Allen St. Pierre, executive director of the National Organization to Reform Marijuana Laws, a nonprofit lobbying group working to broadly legalize marijuana use.
"Between the fact that you can potentially pass out with a single inhalation, or you can have such property damage and potential bodily harm just producing it ... these [issues of the vape pen] definitely need to be addressed," he says. "This is a screaming call for regulation if there ever was one."
http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2014...m_campaign=app
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